EAA/ANN AirVenture Innovation Preview

Super Jumbo To Visit Cities In Europe, Asia-Pacific And Middle
East

The world's newest and largest airliner, the Airbus A380, is to
visit Frankfurt in Germany for airport compatibility verification
tests at the end of this month, and will fly to Singapore, Kuala
Lumpur, Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane in the first half of
November. It will then be on display at the Dubai airshow in the
second half of November.

The visits, which mark the first time that the Airbus A380 will
be seen outside Europe, will give customers a chance to see the
aircraft at first hand, and airports an early opportunity to check
their preparedness to handle it in commercial service.

The tests at Frankfurt will include taxiing around the airport,
docking at a terminal, and checking passenger boarding bridge
positioning. They will also demonstrate ease of access for
servicing vehicles, such as catering trucks, cargo-loaders, fuel
bowsers and water servicing – both individually, and together
as they would be positioned during an aircraft turnaround.

The A380 on this tour is MSN001, the first aircraft to fly and
one of five taking part in the flight-test campaign. Its cabin is
fitted with extensive flight-test instrumentation, measuring
equipment and ballast tanks that can be filled with water to
simulate the weight of a full load of passengers and cargo.

With more than 100 flights and some 350 flight-hours performed
to date in an extensive flight-test programme that already shows a
sound and mature design , the A380 is on track to to deliver on its
promises.

These include 15-20 per cent lower operating cost per seat,
wider seats for all passengers in economy class, and less
environmental impact through the generation of lower emissions and
only half the noise of the largest aircraft in commercial service
today.

Airbus' A380 family (A380 and A380F) has already won a strong
following among many of the world's most prestigious airlines, with
16 customers having placed orders for 159 aircraft so far. These
include Singapore Airlines, which will be the first to take
delivery of an A380, at the end of 2006, followed by Qantas Airways
and Emirates in the second quarter of 2007.

Designed to use existing airports, the Airbus A380 takes off and
lands in less distance than today's largest airliner. While it is
heavier because it carries more passengers, the Airbus A380 has
more wheels to spread its weight, and thus has less impact on
runways. In response to airport recommendations, the length and
wingspan of the A380 have been limited to less than 80 m, making it
easier to integrate the world's largest airliner into their
existing facilities.

With the world's largest and most modern airliner family, Airbus
offers airlines a variety of aircraft sizes and ranges to suit
every need, from short-to-medium haul flights with the A320 Family,
through point-to-point services with the A330, A340 and A350, up to
hub-to-hub flights with the 21st Century flagship A380.